XVll 



Wednesday, March 15th, 1922. 



Prof. E. B. PouLTON, M.A., D.Sc, F.R.S, etc., Vice- 

 President, in the Chair. 



Election of Fellotvs. 



The following were elected Fellows of the Society : — 

 Mr. Reginald Charles Treherne, Department of Agri- 

 culture, Ottawa, Canada ; Mr. T. G. Sloane, Moorilla, Young, 

 New South Wales, Australia; Mr. William Monod Craw- 

 ford, B.A., Orissa, Marlborough Park, Belfast; Mr. Leonard 

 Charles Bushby, 11, Park Grove, Bromley, Kent; Mr. 

 Arthur Morel Massie, Park Place, The Common, Seven- 

 oaks, Kent; Mr. Linnaeus Greening, Fairlight, Grappen- 

 hall, Cheshire; Dr. Francis Arthur, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., 

 395, Bethnal Green Rd., E. 2; Dr. H. Silvester Evans, 

 M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., Lomaloma, Fiji; Mr. John Wilson 

 Moore, 151, Middleton Hall Rd., King's Norton, Birmingham; 

 and Mr. John Edmund Eastwood, Wade Court, Havant, 

 Hants. 



Exhibits. 



Insects from Mount Everest. — Mr. W. H. Tams exhibited 

 and made remarks on a selection of insects, chiefly Lepidoptera, 

 taken on the Mt. Everest expedition. 



A New Beetle and Rare Moth from Madagascar. — 

 Mr. 0. E. Janson exhibited specimens of a new and very 

 distinct species of Euchroea recently received from Mada- 

 gascar, and also from the same country a bred female of the 

 rare, giant Saturniid moth, Argema mittrei, with the cocoon 

 from which it emerged. 



Regeneration of Limbs in Carausius morosus. — Dr. 

 C. J. Gahan exhibited a dead specimen of the well-known 

 Indian Phasmid Carausius morosus in which homoeotic re- 

 generation had taken place, an amputated antenna having 

 been replaced by a tarsus. The specimen was one of a series 

 on which the late Dr. T. A. Chapman had been experimenting 

 some time before his death. So far as he could gather from 

 some rough notes made by Dr. Chapman, which had been 



PROC. ENT. SOC. LOND., V, 1922. B 



